The homophone for "breath" is "breathe." A homophone is a word that is pronounced the same as another word but has a different meaning, origin, or spelling. In this case, "breath" refers to the air taken into or expelled from the lungs, while "breathe" is the action of inhaling and exhaling.
I think you're looking for "pants." That's a homograph, not a homophone.
A homophone for a heavy release of breath is "sigh" and "sigh."
Breathing whole/breath thing whole? (See www.originallanguage.blogspot.com)
A homophone for this would be "sigh" which sounds like "sigh" (heavy breath release) and "sai" (something you wear, like a martial arts weapon).
Bate: to moderate or restrain. To lessen. "With bated breath" is probably the usage most frequently encountered. Often, this homophone is seen in the words abate (as in, "the storm abated at midnight") and rebate ("the manufacturer rebated the difference").
I think you're looking for "pants." That's a homograph, not a homophone.
A homophone for a heavy release of breath is "sigh" and "sigh."
"Pants" in these contexts is a homograph, not a homophone.
Breathing whole/breath thing whole? (See www.originallanguage.blogspot.com)
do at that those paws but i couldnt see it so pause the movie
A homophone for this would be "sigh" which sounds like "sigh" (heavy breath release) and "sai" (something you wear, like a martial arts weapon).
Bate: to moderate or restrain. To lessen. "With bated breath" is probably the usage most frequently encountered. Often, this homophone is seen in the words abate (as in, "the storm abated at midnight") and rebate ("the manufacturer rebated the difference").
The answer is that there is no homophone for can, but can is a homonym.
Him is the homophone for hymn.
Your is a homophone of you're. In some dialects, yore is another homophone.
the homophone for stationery is stationary
The homophone is dense.